Abstract
Background: Environmental factors such as meteorological conditions and air pollutants are recognized as important for human health, where mortality and morbidity of certain diseases may be related to abrupt climate change or air pollutant concentration. In the literature, environmental factors have been identified as risk factors for chronic diseases such as ischemic heart disease. However, the likelihood evaluation of the disease occurrence probability due to environmental factors is missing. Method: We defined people aged 51–90 years who were free from ischemic heart disease (ICD9: 410–414) in 1996–2002 as the susceptible group. A Bayesian conditional logistic regression model based on a case-crossover design was utilized to construct a risk information system and applied to data from three databases in Taiwan: air quality variables from the Environmental Protection Administration (EPA), meteorological parameters from the Central Weather Bureau (CWB), and subject information from the National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD). Results: People living in different geographic regions in Taiwan were found to have different risk factors; thus, disease risk alert intervals varied in the three regions. Conclusions: Disease risk alert intervals can be a reference for weather bureaus to issue health warnings. With early warnings, susceptible groups can take measures to avoid exacerbation of disease when meteorological conditions and air pollution become hazardous to their health.
Subject
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Reference25 articles.
1. World Health Organization (2021). Review of Evidence on Health Aspects of Air Pollution: REVIHAAP Project: Technical Report.
2. Global, Regional, and National Comparative Risk Assessment of 79 Behavioural, Environmental and Occupational, and Metabolic Risks or Clusters of Risks in 188 Countries, 1990–2013: A Systematic Analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013;Forouzanfar;Lancet,2015
3. The Effects of Ozone on Human Health;Nuvolone;Environ. Sci. Pollut. Res.,2018
4. Global Association of Air Pollution and Cardiorespiratory Diseases: A Systematic Review, Meta-Analysis, and Investigation of Modifier Variables;Requia;Am. J. Public Health,2018
5. Global and Regional Mortality from 235 Causes of Death for 20 Age Groups in 1990 and 2010: A Systematic Analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010;Lozano;Lancet,2012